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The Michigan Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ) is seeking to renew the Lundin Eagle Mine’s Ground Water Discharge Permit — with significantly weakened environmental regulations. Below is an analysis of the proposed permit by attorney Michelle Halley for Freshwater Future.

Stay tuned for updates, including the forthcoming MDEQ public hearing announcement, and more.

Exceedances and MDEQ’s Failure to Act and Backwards Regulation

During the current permit period, the mine has exceeded it limits at least 47 times, in at least the following constituents and characteristics:

pH;

arsenic;

copper;

lead;

molybdenum;

silver; and

vanadium.

MDEQ has taken no enforcement action. In fact, the mine has exceeded its vanadium limit more than 20 times. Instead of enforcing the limit, in this renewal permit, MDEQ is easing the limit. This is completely backwards. The MDEQ’s role is regulator, not conciliator. The limits were set, supposedly based upon sound science, as MDEQ strenuously argued during the months-long contested case that encompassed the current groundwater discharge permit. Now, rather than protecting water quality, the draft simply increases the limits to industry’s preferred levels. The facility’s performance should be required to meet the regulatory standards rather than the regulatory standards being adjusted to meet the facility’s performance.

Permit Limits Allow Egregious Degradation from Baseline Water Quality

Further MDEQ staff repeatedly assert that limits set in this renewal permit are based upon “background levels” at the site. That could not be farther from the truth. Below is a table comparing today’s proposed permit levels with baseline levels reported in Rio Tinto’s 2004 Environmental Baseline Study Stage 1 Hydrology Report, Table 9, “Quaternary Deposit Groundwater Quality Data, Eagle Project.” For appropriate comparison, both sets of data reference wells in the A or D zones of the quaternary aquifer:

PARAMETER

UNITS

DRAFT PERMIT LIMIT

2004 RIO TINTO BASELINE DATA

Lithium

ug/L

88

<10

Antimony

ug/L

5

<5.0

Arsenic

ug/L

6

<2.0 (except values of 4.8 and 8.4)

Barium

ug/L

1000

<20 (except values of 47, 39 and 27)

Beryllium

ug/L

3

<1.0

Boron

ug/L

285

<100

Cadmium

ug/L

3

<0.5

Chromium

ug/L

52

<5.0

Cobalt

ug/L

23

<10

Copper

ug/L

10

<5.0

Lead

ug/L

3

<1.0

Manganese

ug/L

50

<20 (except values of 64, 52, 140 and 180)

Molybdenum

ug/L

22

<10 (except values of 15 and 40)

Nickel

ug/L

57

<25

Selenium

ug/L

5

<1.0

Silver

ug/L

0.4

<0.2

Zinc

ug/L

17

<10 (except one value of 17)

Chloride

mg/L

250

Values <1.0 up to 3.7

Sulfate

mg/L

250

Values <5.0 up to 33

Sodium

mg/L

120

Values <0.5 up to 29

Scope of Monitoring and Regulation is Insufficient

In addition to the false justifications for the draft permit’s limits reflecting baseline values, as was the case with the original permit, the scope of monitoring and compliance is far too small to assess impacts to the aquifer that inevitably extend beyond the postage stamp this permit purports to regulate. The monitoring and compliance wells just graze if they extend at all beyond the mine’s fence line. With significant underground disturbance from mining itself, dewatering of the mine, a supply well and the 504,000 gpd influx allowed by this permit, these influences on groundwater flow and quality are ignored by this permit. Please note that Attachment VI, “Groundwater Contour Map” is from the mine’s 2007 permit and does not even attempt to represent the current groundwater contour scenario.

MDEQ continues to refuse to regulate, as required by the Clean Water Act, the surface water discharge at the seeps, where the water regulated by this permit indisputably expresses to surface water. The draft permit, in Part III, No. 1 on p. 22 states:

Discharge to the Surface Waters

This permit does not authorize any discharge to the surface waters. The permittee is responsible for obtaining any permits required by federal or state laws or local ordinances.

Unfortunately, this permit does regulate surface water discharge to the seeps. It does so illegally and inadequately, but it is the only regulation MDEQ has ever imposed on the discharge to the seeps. Michigan has been delegated by the United States the authority to regulate surface water discharges via the Clean Water Act’s National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System. Its failure to do so is egregious. This is particularly evident given MDEQ’s refusal to apply any numeric limitations on: mercury, uranium, calcium, iron and magnesium. Mercury is of great concern in the Great Lakes basin due to the rampant impairment of nearly every surface water body in the region. Yet, at the Eagle Mine, no limit is imposed even though this water ends up in the Salmon Trout River and Lake Superior.

Limits on Uranium and Other Constituents Must At Least Match Federal Limits

In 2013, uranium was found in the wastewater stream at the Eagle Mine. The permittee makes unsubstantiated assertions that the origin of the uranium is some unknown off-site location from which it obtained building materials. MDEQ has the responsibility to regulate uranium, and every other federally-regulated constituent, to federal levels. It is failing to do so with the proposed limits and the numerous “report only” constituents, including uranium.

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Check back for updates on this proposed Ground Water Discharge Permit — and how to get involved to protect our lake, land, and community from the hazards of sulfide mining.

I live in Flint, Michigan. Corporations ARE poor neighbors and can not be trusted along with politicians. General Motors has razed (8) eight plants in the greater area and left the city in ruins. Seventy thousand jobs are gone and mostly over seas the work of yet another multinational corp. and NAFTA<CAFTA and WTO. Our aquifer is polluted and G.M. is not required to clean up.